Where to Stay Near Joshua Tree

Gateway towns, in-park campgrounds, and how to pick the right base for your trip.

Joshua trees silhouetted against a pink and purple desert sunset in Joshua Tree National Park
Sunset over the Quail Springs area. Photo: NPS / Emily Hassell

Here's the thing about Joshua Tree: there's no lodge inside the park. No hotel, no in-park rooms, no cozy historic inn by the entrance. Your choice comes down to camping under the boulders or driving in each morning from a gateway town, and which one you pick depends a lot on whether you want stars overhead or air conditioning.

The gateway towns, ranked by what you actually want

Joshua Tree sits in southern California where the Mojave and Colorado deserts meet, with three entrances strung along Highway 62. Each one has a town, and they're not interchangeable.

Camping inside the park: stars, but plan ahead

The real reason to sleep in Joshua Tree is the night sky. The park protects some of the darkest skies in Southern California, and stargazing here is a genuine event. The Milky Way over the Joshua trees is the kind of thing kids remember. There are several campgrounds among the boulders, and the ones near Jumbo Rocks put you right in the middle of the climbable rock landscape.

Real-world logistics, though:

Where to Stay Near Joshua Tree
Photo: NPS/Brad Sutton

What's near each base, trip-wise

If your itinerary leans toward the headline hikes and the scenic drive, a western base saves you driving. The classics (Hidden Valley, the Cholla Cactus Garden, Skull Rock, Barker Dam, and the full length of Park Boulevard) all sit on the park's west and central side. The Cholla Cactus Garden at sunset is worth timing for.

If you're after the Fortynine Palms Oasis or the Boy Scout Trail, Twentynine Palms and the north side put you closer. And if anyone in your group wants to ride, there's horseback riding in the park too. Whatever your base, build in a ranger program or evening stargazing talk. They're free and they make the desert click for kids.

So where should you actually stay?

Quick verdict. First trip, want the famous views with the least fuss? Base in the town of Joshua Tree and eat the entrance lines by arriving early. Traveling on a budget or with a bigger family? Twentynine Palms gives you more room and a shorter wait at the gate. Here for the night sky above all? Camp inside: Black Rock or Cottonwood if you want water and a softer landing with kids, the central boulder campgrounds if you want to wake up among the rocks. There's no wrong answer, just trade-offs, and the desert delivers either way.

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